Dillard v. Sanderson

227 S.W. 658, 206 Mo. App. 217, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 9
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 8, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 227 S.W. 658 (Dillard v. Sanderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillard v. Sanderson, 227 S.W. 658, 206 Mo. App. 217, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 9 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinions

On June 8, 1917, this cause was transferred by this court to the Supreme Court of Missouri on the ground that title to real estate is involved. The Supreme Court of Missouri, in a decision by the court in Banc, held that in this suit "Title to real estate was only incidentally involved, and was not involved in the sense which lodged jurisdiction in said court," and retransferred this cause to this court, 222 S.W. 766, (not yet officially reported.)

This is a suit by injunction brought by C.W. Dillard, Respondent, against R.R. Sanderson, L.T. Patterson and H.M. Royalty, as Judges of the county court of Pike County, Missouri, C.H. Harris, county highway engineer, and Jesse Williams, district road overseer, of said county.

The suit seeks to enjoin the defendants from entering upon plaintiff's land and opening a public road which the county court of Pike County, Missouri, had established and ordered opened through plaintiff's premises. *Page 219

The answer of the defendants is a general denial, an admission that the defendants were the officers as charged in the petition, and a plea alleging, that a public road was duly and legally established by the county court of Pike County, Missouri, over plaintiff's premises, that the plaintiff appeared in the county court at all stages of the proceedings to establish such road and that the plaintiff perfected an appeal from the judgment establishing said road, returnable to the circuit court of Pike County, Missouri, and that plaintiff thereafter voluntarily dismissed his appeal.

There is no controversy about the facts in this case. The facts are substantially as follows: The respondent is the owner of the Sw. quarter of the Se. quarter of section 31, Township 53, Range 4 West, in Spencer Township, Pike County, Missouri. In May, 1913, a petition was presented to the county court of Pike County, Missouri, praying for the establishment of a county road across the respondent's land. Said petition is in due legal form, it complies strictly with the provisions of the road law found in chapter 102, article 1, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1909. Due notice of the application was given as provided by section 5 of said road law.

No attack is directed against the petition or against the notice. The respondent duly presented a remonstrance in the county court of Pike County to the application for the establishment of said road.

The remonstrance was duly heard. The finding of the county court was against the remonstrators. The county court among other things found: That the petition presented was signed by the requisite number of freeholders of the proper municipal township, that it contained all the jurisdictional facts, and that it was due legal form, that the averments therein contained were true, that due legal notice had been given according to law and the court further found that the facts in the cause justified the said location and establishment of said public road, but not at the expense of the county. The county court also made an order requiring the *Page 220 county highway engineer to view, survey and mark out such road and make report to the court at the next regular term thereof. The county highway engineer duly made his report. His report stated that he had a personal interview with the respondent regarding the right-of-way for the road and that respondent had failed, declined and refused to relinquish the right of way, and that the respondent claimed damages therefor in the amount of $500. The county court then appointed by order of record three disinterested freeholders of the county of Pike to act as a board of commissioners to view the premises, hear complaints, and assess the damages to respondent for the taking of his land. The commissioners duly filed their report. The commissioners assessed the damages sustained by the respondent, because of the taking of his land for said road, at the sum of $50. The petitioners, thereupon deposited with the County Treasurer of Pike County the sum of $50 for the use of the respondent, on account of the damages assessed by the said commissioners to the said respondent, on account of the opening and establishment of said proposed public road. The respondent filed his written exceptions to the report of said commissioners, and prayed the court for a trial of the issue of damages by a jury. The county court granted respondent's prayer. A jury of freeholders was sworn, a trial was had, respondent appeared at said trial. The jury assessed respondent's damages at the sum of $50. Thereupon, the said county court entered up a judgment, establishing the road as prayed for through respondent's land and ordered the road opened. Respondent filed and perfected his appeal to the Circuit Court of Pike County, Missouri. At the April Term, 1914, the respondentvoluntarily asked the circuit court of Pike County to dismisshis appeal from the judgment of the county court. The circuit court on said motion thereupon dismissed said appeal.

The county court of Pike County, Missouri, thereupon entered up its final judgment establishing the road *Page 221 through respondent's land and ordered the road opened. Respondents, thereafter, brought this action in the circuit court of Pike County, Missouri. Said circuit court found the issues in favor of the respondent and entered a judgment perpetually enjoining the appellants from entering upon, or establishing, or opening a public road across respondent's said land. Appellants appealed to this court.

Respondent contends that the said judgment of the county court of Pike County, Missouri, is void, because the record of the proceedings, establishing the public road, fails to show that:

(1) "Before the order requiring the county highway engineer to view, survey and mark out the road" (a) "There was no finding, or fixing, the probable amount of damages to the owners of the land through which said proposed road should run." (b) "There is no record that the petitioners paid into the county treasury the probable amount of damages fixed by the court."

(2) "After said order requiring the county highway engineer to view, survey and mark out said road, and report to the county court on the same." "There is no record that it appeared to the court from said report, that the damages claimed does not exceed the amount offered by the court or deposited by the petitioners before the court ordered the road established or changed."

(3) "Because there is no record that it appeared to the court, that any person or persons, through whose land such proposed road should run, and particularly this respondent, was not willing to take the amount of damages offered him by the court or petitioners."

Section 10437, Revised Statutes 1909, among other things provides: "provided, that if the petitioners pay into the county treasury the probable amount of damages, as aforesaid, to the use of the owners of said lands, which shall be fixed at the time bythe court, then said court shall make said order requiring the county *Page 222 highway engineer to view, survey and mark out said road." Said section further provides: "And if it appears from said report (the engineers report) that the damages claimed does not exceed the amount offered by the court or deposited by thepetitioners, as aforesaid, the court shall order the road established."

Section 10438, Revised Statutes 1909, among other things provides: "But if it appears that any person, or persons, through whose lands such proposed road should run have failed to relinquish the right of way and are not willing to take the amount of damages offered them by the court or petitioners

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Related

Reeves v. Green.
222 S.W. 795 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1920)
Dillard v. Anderson
222 S.W. 766 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1920)
Shoppert v. Martin
38 S.W. 967 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1897)
Searcy v. Clay County
75 S.W. 657 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1903)
Grossman v. Patton
85 S.W. 548 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1905)
Ripkey v. Binns
175 S.W. 206 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 S.W. 658, 206 Mo. App. 217, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillard-v-sanderson-moctapp-1921.